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Space Bag Asteroid Heist: Mining Near Earth?
20 Mar
Summary
- Company plans to bag asteroids and move them closer to Earth.
- An inflatable 32-foot capture bag technology was tested on the ISS.
- First asteroid retrieval mission could launch as early as 2028.

TransAstra, a company based in Los Angeles, has revealed a novel approach to asteroid mining. Their "New Moon" mission concept involves using a large inflatable bag to capture near-Earth asteroids and transport them into a stable orbit closer to our planet. This initiative aims to establish a readily accessible source of valuable materials for space-based construction and exploration.
The company has already achieved a critical milestone by successfully testing its core capture technology. A smaller, 3-foot inflatable capture bag was deployed and retrieved multiple times in a microgravity vacuum environment aboard the International Space Station in October 2025. This demonstration validates the feasibility of their approach for both orbital debris remediation and asteroid capture.
TransAstra's ambitious plan includes launching its first asteroid retrieval mission as early as 2028. Subsequent missions would follow to process the captured space rocks. This endeavor follows NASA's successful OSIRIS-REx mission, which proved material can be returned from asteroids, though large-scale mining remains a frontier.
The potential for unlocking significant resources, including water and precious metals, continues to drive private industry efforts. TransAstra estimates that new telescopes will discover hundreds more asteroids suitable for mining in the coming years, positioning them to actively seek and retrieve the most promising celestial bodies.




